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Protesters surround Tim Houston's car, windshield smashed after speech

Protesters surround Tim Houston's car, windshield smashed after speech

What was supposed to be the start of Premier Tim Houston's speaking tour to chambers of commerce across Nova Scotia ended up with him requiring a police escort. Houston was in Wolfville, N.S., on Wednesday where he was addressing the Annapolis Valley Chamber of Commerce at Acadia University about his vision for the province's economy. When Houston first arrived at...

Canada pauses applications for parent, grandparent immigration sponsorship program

Canada pauses applications for parent, grandparent immigration sponsorship program

The federal government will not accept any new applications this year from people who want to sponsor their parents and grandparents to come to Canada as permanent residents under a program meant to promote family reunification. The Immigration Department said the change is part of an effort to responsibly manage the system and reduce wait times. In a statement posted...

Canada, U.S. contradict each other on financial terms of Gordie Howe Bridge deal

Canada, U.S. contradict each other on financial terms of Gordie Howe Bridge deal

The US and Canada are presenting different accounts of a profit-sharing deal President Donald Trump agreed to that permits a new bridge connecting Michigan and Ontario to open later this month. The White House and the government of Prime Minister Mark Carney last Friday announced an agreement to open the Gordie Howe International Bridge after the US delayed it. Canada...

Conservatives spent nearly double the Liberals in losing election year

Conservatives spent nearly double the Liberals in losing election year

The federal Conservatives outspent the Liberals almost two to one last year despite losing the general election to Mark Carney’s incumbent party, which won a fourth consecutive campaign. Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre’s party also ended the year in debt, even as it raised a record $48.4-million from supporters in 2025. The Liberals, meanwhile, ended the year with no debt, after...

Canada joining international program to build next generation of fighter jet

Canada joining international program to build next generation of fighter jet

U.K., Japan and Italy are partners in multibillion-dollar program. Defence Minister David McGuinty is expected to announce in the United Kingdom next week that Canada will play a role in an international program to build the next generation of stealth fighter jets, CBC News has learned. Canada has reached a deal to join the Global Combat Air Program as an...

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Economic Pressures Endure, Political Rankings Hold - LPC 43%, CPC 31%

Economic Pressures Endure, Political Rankings Hold - LPC 43%, CPC 31%

The federal political landscape endures, with the Liberals at 43.0 per cent among committed voters compared with 31.0 per cent for the Conservatives. Mark Carney remains the preferred choice for prime minister at 51.5 per cent. Jobs and the economy continue to be Canadians’ top national concern at 21.5 per cent, followed by cost of living at 12.0 per cent.

Confidence hits a four-month high.

Confidence hits a four-month high.



Opinion

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Canadians want more mining projects, and trust Canada’s miners
Equalization reform: Great idea. Long overdue. Not going to happen

Equalization reform: Great idea. Long overdue. Not going to happen

There are, it is sometimes said, only six people in Canada who understand the equalization formula, and five of them are dead. This is not entirely a joke. Equalization – the system of federal transfers to provinces whose “fiscal capacity” is judged to be below the national average – has become so overloaded with political fixes over the years, in...

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Judge extends injunction freezing millions of Alberta separatist leader's assets

Judge extends injunction freezing millions of Alberta separatist leader's assets

A judge has extended a special court order freezing the assets of a prominent Alberta separatist as part of an ongoing trust fund dispute with a First Nation. Last week, Justice Michael Marion in Calgary granted a temporary injunction freezing up to $8.5 million in assets held by Jeffrey Rath. It's part of an ongoing legal battle between Rath and...

More Canadians trust China under Xi Jinping than Donald Trump's America: Pew poll

More Canadians trust China under Xi Jinping than Donald Trump's America: Pew poll

As President Donald Trump's administration continues to erode allies' trust, a new poll says the Canadians surveyed who say they hold a favourable view of China now outnumber those who say the same of the United States. Recent polling by the Pew Research Center found Trump receiving mostly negative ratings from countries around the world. Today, the agency released new...

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Prepare for a world of ad hoc coalitions

Prepare for a world of ad hoc coalitions

We lead two countries that do not have the luxury of relying on old orders of geography. Finland shares a border with a Russia that is waging a war of aggression against Ukraine and actively interfering in other societies instead of reforming its own. Canada shares the world’s longest land border with a United States that is reassessing its priorities...

Doug Ford is missing the point of what Ontario’s Legislature does

Doug Ford is missing the point of what Ontario’s Legislature does

“Rather than sitting here and arguing with each other, we’re actually going to get out there and talk to the people!” That’s how Premier Doug Ford defined the Legislature of Ontario. It was his defence for the unprecedented five-month break and the lowest number of days “The Ledge” will sit in decades.



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Help wanted: The federal Conservatives are in need of an adult

Help wanted: The federal Conservatives are in need of an adult

Conservative MP Dean Allison called a news conference last week to give the media an update on his inquiry into the COVID-19 vaccine. If you’re like me, you’re probably thinking: There’s an inquiry into the COVID-19 vaccine? Why? Mr. Allison was accompanied by a couple of supporters: The husband-and-wife team of Shawn and Theresa Buckley, who run the Covid Testimony...

Prime Minister Carney’s bold steps towards reconciliation with Alberta

Prime Minister Carney’s bold steps towards reconciliation with Alberta

The 114th Calgary Stampede has come and gone, along with its performative, clichéd pancake-flipping political festival. But this year, one visitor mattered: Prime Minister Mark Carney – or rather, how Albertans would receive him. A lot is riding on the prime minister’s rapprochement with Albertans, and the vast majority of Canadians are hopeful that progress is being made and that...

The Conservative flogging will continue until morale improves

The Conservative flogging will continue until morale improves

As sure as summer is upon us, so are the regular tribulations of the federal Conservative Party in opposition. When the federal Conservatives sit in opposition and trail the Liberals in the polls, chances are whoever the leader is not living their best life. Step forward, Pierre Poilievre, it is your turn for a pummelling. Unfortunately for Poilievre, he tends...

The Gordie Howe Bridge deal isn’t simply politics as usual. It’s about Trump’s distorted vision of power

The Gordie Howe Bridge deal isn’t simply politics as usual. It’s about Trump’s distorted vision of power

The latest agreement between our government and the Trump administration to allow the opening of the Gordie Howe bridge that links Windsor and Detroit is just the latest in a long saga. After much delay and dithering, the bridge was scheduled to be open for business on June 15, 2026, after a planned ribbon cutting on June 12. The plan...

Trump’s Gordie Howe victory lap is the model for making deals with him

Trump’s Gordie Howe victory lap is the model for making deals with him

One observer said on CUSMA, Canada has to propose something that allows Trump to take the credit ‘without doing something that’s bad’

A U.S. bridge shakedown in a rough world

A U.S. bridge shakedown in a rough world

“Nice bridge you got there,” the thugs said. “It’d be a shame if something happened to it.” That’s not a verbatim transcript of what U.S. President Donald Trump’s operatives told Prime Minister Mark Carney about the Gordie Howe International Bridge, but it might as well have been. The U.S. President just shook down this country, refusing to allow the opening...



‘Coin of the Realm’: CUSMA, the Gordie Howe Bridge, and the End of Bilateral Trust

‘Coin of the Realm’: CUSMA, the Gordie Howe Bridge, and the End of Bilateral Trust

The Gordie Howe International Bridge should have been the easiest file in Canada-U.S. relations. Canada paid roughly $6.4 billion to build the bridge. Michigan received a new international crossing, customs facilities and a direct Interstate 75 connection without paying the construction bill. American workers, contractors and steel producers benefited. Automakers gained a badly needed alternative to the aging Ambassador Bridge...

Carney’s Leadership is Essential to Deliver on Canada’s Wild Salmon Promise
Can we take Mark Carney at his word, or is he Prime Minister Pants-on-Fire?

Can we take Mark Carney at his word, or is he Prime Minister Pants-on-Fire?

Prime Minister Mark Carney’s charm—and that, he has in abundance—may be wearing thin with some Canadians. His recent enthusiastic endorsement of another oil pipeline, intended eventually to carry another 100 million barrels a day of Alberta oil to foreign buyers, will surprise only those who have not been paying close attention. Carney has shredded most of Justin Trudeau’s green policies...

Senate ‘modernization’ in the Carney era: why partisanship isn’t what we need to worry about

Senate ‘modernization’ in the Carney era: why partisanship isn’t what we need to worry about

Prime Minister Mark Carney has a plan to “modernize” the Senate. If this sounds familiar, it’s likely because his predecessor, Justin Trudeau, said the same thing 11 years ago. Trudeau’s reform measures sought to eliminate partisanship from Senate appointments—or at least to create this appearance—Carney is bringing back partisan appointments. While proponents of democracy and political equality are likely not...

Is Carney signalling a return of a two-party partisan Senate with new appointments?

Is Carney signalling a return of a two-party partisan Senate with new appointments?

Sandwiched between 25 other news releases last week — from the prime minister’s NATO trip, to his lunch with Saudi Arabia Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman — the man the CIA believes ordered the assassination of journalist Jamal Khashoggi — Mark Carney moved to drown out the opposition voices he’s encountered in the Senate. In a statement Tuesday, Carney announced...

Mark Carney’s visit to Saudi Arabia revealed a narrowed vision of Canada’s place in the world

Mark Carney’s visit to Saudi Arabia revealed a narrowed vision of Canada’s place in the world

“O Canada” was played in Saudi Arabia this week for the first time in 26 years. That quarter-century silence tells the real story behind Mark Carney’s visit to Jeddah. The last Canadian prime minister to visit Saudi Arabia was Jean Chrétien, in 2000, during a 12-day Middle East tour driven by a very different ambition: to reinforce Canada’s role as...



Mark Carney’s government loves memorandums of understanding. So, what are they exactly?

Mark Carney’s government loves memorandums of understanding. So, what are they exactly?

Prime Minister Mark Carney’s way of communicating and branding things is so distinct that some choice Carneyisms have crept into everyday Canadian speech over the year and a half he’s been a daily national presence. We don’t have plans or policies in this country right now – everything is a strategy. Public money purportedly luring private investment is, of course...

Rage politics meets its serious counterpart

Rage politics meets its serious counterpart

Serious times call for serious politics. That means serious leaders offering serious solutions. If all this sounds like a campaign slogan for the establishment, you’re probably right. But its rising resonance may well prove the unravelling of the conservative populist rage that has been driving politics in Canada, the United States and Europe.

Hey, big spender: Why we need to start giving Carney a bit less benefit of the doubt

Hey, big spender: Why we need to start giving Carney a bit less benefit of the doubt

Mark Carney is committing enormous sums of public money with little explanation, in ways that neither Justin Trudeau nor most other prime ministers before him could have gotten away with. It can be easy to look past, because of the financial gravitas that Carney carries.

Poilievre-Elliott tiff has right-wing in a tizzy

Poilievre-Elliott tiff has right-wing in a tizzy

Federal Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre provoked a backlash this week with an ill-advised comment on the outcome of the race for the leadership of the B.C. party of the same name. At a party event in Calgary, Poilievre took note of the presence of the new leader of the B.C. Conservatives, Kerry-Lynne Findlay, hailing her as the “future premier of...

Canada is taking an outsized role in the construction of the post-American world

Canada is taking an outsized role in the construction of the post-American world

Annual gatherings of the great democracies in the age of Donald Trump have acquired a certain … rhythm. There is the meeting that takes place before the President arrives, when all is as it usually is between world leaders of the same broad ideological hue: convivial open sessions, chummy photo-ops, urgent side-conferences. Then there is what happens after he gets...

Twitter is poisoning the Conservative movement

Twitter is poisoning the Conservative movement

When Elon Musk bought Twitter in 2022, he promised to restore its commitment to free speech, eliminate its progressive bias and otherwise preserve its role as the “de-facto public square.” Instead, as anyone who has had the misfortune of spending time there knows, he turned it into a right-wing echo chamber — one increasingly populated with spam, crypto scammers and...



Carney may lead the Trump ‘resistance,’ but Canadian casualties are mounting

Carney may lead the Trump ‘resistance,’ but Canadian casualties are mounting

Real life does not follow the binary framework of the movies, where a Bond-like hero vanquishes a grandiose, arrogant, greedy villain

Mark Carney has said nothing about Alberta’s health care reforms. That’s a good thing

Mark Carney has said nothing about Alberta’s health care reforms. That’s a good thing

It’s not often that a prime minister is lauded for something that he doesn’t do, but Prime Minister Mark Carney is currently being celebrated by six policy organizations for his inaction on an important Canadian regulatory matter. In an open letter published late last month, the CEO of the Canadian Health Policy Institute, the deputy director of domestic policy for...

I'm a Conservative who wants to win! That doesn't make me a Liberal

I'm a Conservative who wants to win! That doesn't make me a Liberal

I am sick to death of being told that wanting Conservatives to win elections somehow makes me a Liberal. It's one of the stupidest ideas ever to infect the Canadian political right (and there have been some doozies in recent years), and it has become an excuse for failure. Apparently, if you care whether Conservatives can actually form government, you're...

Smith's big Stampede rollouts aimed at cutting separatist support

Smith's big Stampede rollouts aimed at cutting separatist support

The grandaddy of all Stampede political announcements came on July 12, 2004, when PC Premier Ralph Klein held up a sign that said: Paid In Full. Klein declared the provincial debt dead and buried after many years of harsh cost-cutting. The words and the photo sped around the country and beyond. Nobody paid off all debt in those days. Within...

Trump’s baldfaced America 250 corruption is a reminder to the world, and a warning

Trump’s baldfaced America 250 corruption is a reminder to the world, and a warning

There are plenty of ways to celebrate America’s ongoing semiquincentennial: see a fight on the White House lawn, watch the World Cup in the shadow of the Capitol, visit a Great American State Fair on the National Mall. However they celebrate, Americans will likely see banners advertising Freedom250, a private vehicle for outright corruption cooked up by President Donald Trump...

Defiant Pierre Poilievre fights back, vows to keep exposing Carney as a fake

Defiant Pierre Poilievre fights back, vows to keep exposing Carney as a fake

He's not giving up. He's not backing down. If he was a boxer you'd need to knock him out. The man insists he is not throwing in the towel. He will continue to throw down the gauntlet. Wasn't so long ago Pierre Poilievre had the momentum, drew the huge crowds at rallies across Canada, attracted the young and the working...

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Feds announce new members of reformed Senate advisory board

Feds announce new members of reformed Senate advisory board

A week after Prime Minister Mark Carney announced his first picks for the Red Chamber, the federal government has named almost a dozen people to its Independent Advisory Board for Senate Appointments. In 2016, the previous Liberal government created the independent advisory board to provide non-binding recommendations on Senate appointments to the prime minister. Under the Carney government, the board...

Chiefs warn they'll fight any assault on First Nations rights in major projects push

Chiefs warn they'll fight any assault on First Nations rights in major projects push

First Nations chiefs say they'll oppose any actions by federal and provincial governments to expedite major projects that would undermine their rights and environmental protections. They passed two resolutions at the Assembly of First Nations annual general meeting in Ottawa on Wednesday confirming that stance and committing the AFN to opposing legislation or policies that dilute their rights or undermine...

Bank of Canada holds key rate steady at 2.25%, predicts economic rebound

Bank of Canada holds key rate steady at 2.25%, predicts economic rebound

The Bank of Canada is holding its policy rate at 2.25 per cent and says that it expects the Canadian economy to improve, despite flatlined growth over the past 18 months. But there are big caveats. Although the economy is showing signs of improvement and inflation is easing, the BOC’s new monetary policy report released today warns that uncertainty driven...

Feds, most provinces get top marks on internal trade -- but more work to be done

Feds, most provinces get top marks on internal trade -- but more work to be done

The federal government has gone from a C student to top of the class in its work to advance internal trade between provinces, says the Canadian Federation of Independent Business. In the federation's latest annual report card on internal trade, the federal government jumped to an A-plus from the C grade it got in 2025. The report card released Wednesday...

Court battle involving Alberta separatist leader who had assets frozen set to resume

Court battle involving Alberta separatist leader who had assets frozen set to resume

A court case involving a prominent Alberta separatist who had his assets frozen is set to move forward today. Last week, Justice Michael Marion in Calgary granted an interim injunction freezing up to $8.5 million in assets held by Jeffrey Rath. That injunction is set to be reviewed as part of a legal battle between Rath and Tallcree First Nation...

First Nations chiefs gather in Ottawa for second day of AFN general assembly

First Nations chiefs gather in Ottawa for second day of AFN general assembly

First Nations leaders attending the Assembly of First Nations annual general meeting in Ottawa today are expected to debate the terms of an upcoming meeting with Prime Minister Mark Carney and the premiers and territorial leaders. In her opening remarks to the gathering Tuesday, Assembly of First Nations National Chief Cindy Woodhouse Nepinak said a planned meeting this fall between...

After more than 100 days as NDP leader, has Avi Lewis moved the needle? New polling says favourability for Lewis and vote intention for NDP remain flat.

After more than 100 days as NDP leader, has Avi Lewis moved the needle? New polling says favourability for Lewis and vote intention for NDP remain flat.

New polling says favourability for Lewis and vote intention for NDP remain flat. NDP Leader Avi Lewis spent the first 100 days at his party's helm outside of Parliament, and isn't looking for a seat any time soon. But since his election in March, the seatless leader also appears to have made little headway in making a name for himself...

Senior Trump official calls ‘middle powers’ strategy waste of time, money

Senior Trump official calls ‘middle powers’ strategy waste of time, money

A senior Trump administration official is publicly criticizing the idea of a collective “middle powers” strategy among American allies and partners, warning it is a “distraction” that could cost them “time, money and political capital.” In a series of posts on X on Tuesday, Elbridge Colby, the U.S. Undersecretary of Defence for Policy, also pushed back on the idea that...

Ottawa makes no promise to release text of new Gordie Howe bridge deal

Ottawa makes no promise to release text of new Gordie Howe bridge deal

Prime Minister Mark Carney is playing down the amount of toll profits Canada will share with the United States under a new deal to open the Gordie Howe International Bridge, but his government is so far making no commitment to release the text of the arrangement. The new Windsor-Detroit crossing, along one of Canada’s most important trade corridors, is set...

‘Buyer’s remorse’ building over Carney’s ‘transactionalist’ approach to global affairs, says ex-Grit foreign minister Axworthy

‘Buyer’s remorse’ building over Carney’s ‘transactionalist’ approach to global affairs, says ex-Grit foreign minister Axworthy

'There’s a fairly narrow bandwidth that the government is working on internationally,' says Lloyd Axworthy, but other past officials disagree that the PM's method is a 'radical departure,' calling it a 'wonderful opportunity.' Former Liberal top diplomat Lloyd Axworthy says Prime Minister Mark Carney is forgoing consultation in his approach to foreign policy, and that his method is diminishing the...

Will Hamilton hit pause on data centres? Council set to vote on moratorium

Will Hamilton hit pause on data centres? Council set to vote on moratorium

Hamilton is expected to vote today on whether to become the first city in Canada to put a temporary pause on new data centres. The moratorium vote comes as local lawmakers across the country wrestle with the noise, energy and water concerns around a new wave of data centres powering the boom in artificial intelligence. Backers of Hamilton's proposal say...

Assets of Alberta separatist leader frozen in dispute with First Nation

Assets of Alberta separatist leader frozen in dispute with First Nation

An Alberta court has temporarily frozen up to $8.5 million in assets held by one of the province's most recognizable separatist leaders. Justice Michael Marion granted an interim injunction last week preventing Jeffrey Rath and his law firm from transferring the assets until a Wednesday hearing. It's part of an ongoing legal battle between the Tallcree First Nation and Rath...

'I broke the law,' former Manitoba MP Inky Mark says after police seize over 400 firearms

'I broke the law,' former Manitoba MP Inky Mark says after police seize over 400 firearms

A former federal politician denies trafficking any firearms but acknowledges he illegally transferred three guns, after police seized hundreds of weapons from his western Manitoba home last week.

Conservatives fear fundraising slump amid sagging polls, infighting

Conservatives fear fundraising slump amid sagging polls, infighting

Amid anemic poll numbers and messy public infighting, some Conservatives worry that fundraising numbers are also taking a hit as Pierre Poilievre struggles to keep his party together. The Conservatives have long maintained a fundraising advantage over the Liberal Party, while in government and on the opposition benches. That edge is a point of pride for the Conservative Party, which...

Ottawa to create facility for military drone research in Quebec

Ottawa to create facility for military drone research in Quebec

The federal government is creating a research facility to advance Canada's military capabilities with drones. National Defence Minister David McGuinty was in Mirabel, Que., home to a major aerospace hub, to make the announcement. A group of 30 organizations, led by Aero Montreal, will receive nearly $30 million over two years to establish and operate the new defence innovation centre...

Former MP Raj Grewal faces slew of fraud allegations, possible suspension as lawyer

Former MP Raj Grewal faces slew of fraud allegations, possible suspension as lawyer

The Law Society of Ontario is investigating charges that onetime Liberal MP may have misappropriated trust money and participated in fraud Ontario’s legal regulator is moving to suspend the licence of lawyer Raj Grewal as the former Liberal MP faces a slew of lawsuits accusing him, the law firm he founded, family members and associates of millions of dollars in...

Canada Post management given $30.8 million in performance pay despite record losses

Canada Post management given $30.8 million in performance pay despite record losses

Despite record losses and a massive government bailout, Canada Post handed its executives and managers $30.8 million in performance-based payments in 2025. Canada Post reported an unprecedented $1.57 billion in losses before tax in 2025 – the most it has ever recorded. As the federal crown corporation continues to hemorrhage money, Ottawa recently approved a bailout of up to $67...

Tracking polls push Liberals to lowest level since February

Tracking polls push Liberals to lowest level since February

With the summer heat lulling our national pollsters into a polling siesta, the only two surveys with federal voting intentions published over the last week came from the two tracking pollsters, Liaison Strategies and Nanos Research. That dearth of data from a broad array of pollsters — since mid-June, the only other pollster to put out any new numbers was...

So far, foreign-owned firms have dominated Buy Canadian contracts

So far, foreign-owned firms have dominated Buy Canadian contracts

More than 70 per cent of contracts awarded under the federal government’s new Buy Canadian procurement policy have gone to foreign-owned subsidiaries

First Nations to take part in first ministers meeting in October: AFN chief

First Nations to take part in first ministers meeting in October: AFN chief

A planned meeting this fall between first ministers and chiefs from across the country was hard to secure and must not be the only one of its kind, Assembly of First Nations National Chief Cindy Woodhouse Nepinak said Tuesday. In her opening remarks at the AFN's annual general assembly in Ottawa, Woodhouse Nepinak told chiefs the Prime Minister's Office has...

Carney replaces New York envoy Tom Clark with oil exec, appoints ex-MP to Los Angeles

Carney replaces New York envoy Tom Clark with oil exec, appoints ex-MP to Los Angeles

The Carney government is replacing former broadcast journalist Tom Clark as consul general to New York City with an oil executive, and naming a former cabinet minister as Canada's envoy in Los Angeles. The Trudeau government appointed Clark, a former CTV and Global journalist, to the post in 2023. The consul general promotes Canada's economic and cultural interests in the...

Business leaders applaud Gordie Howe bridge opening — despite concerns over profit-sharing deal

Business leaders applaud Gordie Howe bridge opening — despite concerns over profit-sharing deal

After multiple delays, the Gordie Howe International Bridge has, once again, a new opening date — and this time, it appears to be sticking. Canadian business groups are welcoming the news that Canada and the U.S. have struck a deal to open the 2.5-kilometre Windsor-Detroit bridge on July 27.

Ex-government scientist accused of copying work files to further new career in China

Ex-government scientist accused of copying work files to further new career in China

A former government scientist faces criminal charges after allegedly downloading thousands of work files from the Department of Natural Resources to external storage drives to further a new career in China, court records show. According to a security report prepared by Natural Resources, the accused, 66-year-old Dennis Lu, has expertise in technology that can be used to purify graphite, a...

Turkish gun given to PM would have to undergo review before going in museum

Turkish gun given to PM would have to undergo review before going in museum

Canada's national war and history museums say they would have to conduct a review before they could display a personalized revolver and ammunition given to Prime Minister Mark Carney at this year's NATO summit. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan gave each visiting NATO leader a handgun with their name engraved on it as a gift at the conclusion of the...

Prominent Alberta separatist’s assets frozen as First Nation alleges he diverted funds

Prominent Alberta separatist’s assets frozen as First Nation alleges he diverted funds

A judge has temporarily frozen more than $8.5-million in assets belonging to Jeffrey Rath, a lawyer and prominent voice in Alberta’s separatist movement, and his legal firm after a First Nation alleged misappropriation of money that he was overseeing as the band’s trustee. Alberta Court of King’s Bench Justice Michael Marion issued the freezing order, known as a Mareva injunction...

First Nations chiefs to debate major projects, Indian Act changes in Ottawa

First Nations chiefs to debate major projects, Indian Act changes in Ottawa

Hundreds of First Nations chiefs are gathering in Ottawa today for the Assembly of First Nations annual meeting. They'll be debating 53 separate resolutions during the three-day gathering. They include resolutions on the federal government's major projects agenda, the state of First Nations child welfare, Indian Act status and calls for the Vatican to rescind a series of papal decrees...

Ottawa launching new secure drone-testing facility in Quebec as part of defence push

Ottawa launching new secure drone-testing facility in Quebec as part of defence push

Ottawa is establishing a new secure facility for industry to test and experiment with uncrewed systems, as part of an effort to accelerate the development of the technology which the federal government is placing an emphasis on through its defence build-up. In an announcement on Tuesday, Defence Minister David McGuinty said the Uncrewed Systems Defence Innovation Secure Hub will be...

Green Party's Tayte Willows wins P.E.I. byelection, beating Liberal leader

Green Party's Tayte Willows wins P.E.I. byelection, beating Liberal leader

The Green Party has been declared unofficial winner in a Prince Edward Island byelection that gives it the same number of seats in the legislature as the Opposition Liberals. The provincial byelection in Cornwall-Meadowbank was called after Progressive Conservative cabinet minister Mark McLane died in March. Tayte Willows of the Green Party received almost 1,200 votes, representing nearly 40 per...

Former Manitoba MP Inky Mark charged with firearms trafficking after hundreds of weapons seized

Former Manitoba MP Inky Mark charged with firearms trafficking after hundreds of weapons seized

Antique cannon, $300K in cash also found at former member of Parliament's home, police say. A former federal politician in Manitoba has been charged after police say they seized hundreds of improperly stored firearms from his home last week. Mounties seized 439 firearms found inside Inky Mark's home near the western Manitoba city of Dauphin during a July 7 search...

Former N.S. premier John Hamm dies at 88

Former N.S. premier John Hamm dies at 88

Former Nova Scotia premier John Hamm, the Pictou County physician who prescribed belt-tightening for the province's books, has died at age 88. Straight-laced and soft spoken, he was first elected in 1993 and served as Nova Scotia's 25th premier from 1999 to 2006. He first lead a majority government before being held to a minority four years later. But away...



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Donald Trump endorses 'Pillow Man' Mike Lindell for Minnesota governor

Donald Trump endorses 'Pillow Man' Mike Lindell for Minnesota governor

President Donald Trump has endorsed MyPillow founder Mike Lindell for Minnesota governor, praising him as "one of America's greatest and most hard working Patriots."

Biden will publish 'Promise Me, America' memoir after the November midterm elections

Biden will publish 'Promise Me, America' memoir after the November midterm elections

NEW YORK (AP) -- Former President Joe Biden will publish a memoir this fall, publisher Little, Brown and Company told The Associated Press.

Trump will speak on elections in primetime address after pushing debunked conspiracies

Trump will speak on elections in primetime address after pushing debunked conspiracies

WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Donald Trump will deliver a primetime address this week that he says will include a focus on elections, suggesting he could revisit long-debunked conspiracy theories about his 2020 defeat to Democrat Joe Biden. The speech comes as he's escalated calls for Republicans to pass tighter federal voting rules for November's midterm elections.

March for democracy planned for anniversary of historic MLK-led 1963 Washington march

WASHINGTON (AP) -- A large coalition led by the Rev. Al Sharpton and the family of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. will mark the anniversary of the historic March on Washington next month with a march for democracy.

International

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Senior Trump official calls ‘middle powers’ strategy waste of time, money

Senior Trump official calls ‘middle powers’ strategy waste of time, money

A senior Trump administration official is publicly criticizing the idea of a collective “middle powers” strategy among American allies and partners, warning it is a “distraction” that could cost them “time, money and political capital.” In a series of posts on X on Tuesday, Elbridge Colby, the U.S. Undersecretary of Defence for Policy, also pushed back on the idea that...

Trump says U.S. will blockade Iran in the Strait of Hormuz and will charge ships for safe passage

Trump says U.S. will blockade Iran in the Strait of Hormuz and will charge ships for safe passage

U.S. President Donald Trump said Monday that the United States is “reinstating” a blockade on Iran in the Strait of Hormuz and will charge ships for safe passage, after another heavy exchange of fire threatened negotiations aimed at ending the war. He said on social media that Iranian ships will no longer be able to travel through the strait and...

Sen. Lindsey Graham, a close Trump ally and foreign policy hawk, dies after a brief illness

Sen. Lindsey Graham, a close Trump ally and foreign policy hawk, dies after a brief illness

Sen. Lindsey Graham, one of President Donald Trump's closest allies in Congress who traveled the globe to advocate for a more aggressive U.S. foreign policy, has died after a "brief and sudden illness," his office said. He was 71. The statement posted on social media early Sunday said his family "appreciates prayers at this time and asks for privacy during...

Iran says it hit vessel in Strait of Hormuz, declares route closed; U.S. announces retaliatory strikes

Iran says it hit vessel in Strait of Hormuz, declares route closed; U.S. announces retaliatory strikes

Iran said it considers the Strait of Hormuz closed once again after a vessel using an "unauthorized route" was struck by a warning shot in the critical waterway, further jeopardizing the already tenuous ceasefire agreement with the United States. The U.S. military said it responded to the attack with fresh strikes on Iran. "The United States is imposing a heavy...

Ottawa mum on joining legal case against Trump's sanctioning of Canadian ICC judge

Ottawa mum on joining legal case against Trump's sanctioning of Canadian ICC judge

Ottawa won't say whether it will intervene in support of a Winnipeg-born global judge who is asking a U.S. court to reverse sanctions ordered by U.S. President Donald Trump, which have left her unable to use a credit card or most major online vendors. Washington sanctioned International Criminal Court judge Kimberly Prost nearly a year ago, over her work on...

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What Is Sovereignty? Canada and the Politics of Shared Authority

What Is Sovereignty? Canada and the Politics of Shared Authority

This October, Canada faces both an Alberta referendum that could catalyze an unprecedented independence vote in that province and a provincial election that could do the same in Québec for the third time in 50 years. As a result, the word “sovereignty” has again entered our national, daily political discourse. As it happens, sovereignty is one of the most frequently...

Arctic power networks: Domestic institutions, corporate actors, and ideological drivers in Russia’s High North strategy

Arctic power networks: Domestic institutions, corporate actors, and ideological drivers in Russia’s High North strategy

Russia’s Arctic strategy is often misunderstood in Western policy debates. Too much attention remains fixed on President Vladimir Putin, military deployments, or short-term geopolitical crises. This obscures a more important reality for Canada, the United States, and their allies: Russia’s Arctic posture is sustained by a durable network of state corporations, regional authorities, security institutions, and ideological organizations that shape...

The integration illusion: Seven decades of electricity trade data and the case against market restructuring in Canada

The integration illusion: Seven decades of electricity trade data and the case against market restructuring in Canada

In May 2026, the federal government published Powering Canada Strong: A National Strategy for an Electrified Canadian Economy, casting electricity as the backbone of Canada’s economic sovereignty, industrial competitiveness, and climate ambition.


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A collection of SubStack publishing within Canadian public affairs.

Carbon Capture and the Pipeline: Is There Less Quid in the Quid Pro Quo?

Carbon Capture and the Pipeline: Is There Less Quid in the Quid Pro Quo?

Prime Minister Carney has made clear from the outset of his time in office that without a commitment to implement the Pathways carbon capture and storage (CCS) project, there would be no new bitumen pipeline to the B.C. coast. The expectation was formalized in the Nov. 27 Alberta-Ottawa MOU and the May 15 Implementation Agreement. The oil sands industry has...

Ottawa to press for return of looted grave goods

Ottawa to press for return of looted grave goods

An Indigenous couple’s remains, repatriated to Canada six years ago, have yet to find a final resting place because their “spiritual belongings” are being held by museums in the United Kingdom. Six objects associated with Demasduit and Nonosabasut, among the last of the Beothuks of Newfoundland, are being retained by the National Museums Scotland and by the British Museum. Thanks...

Let’s Stop Obsessing Over CUSMA

Let’s Stop Obsessing Over CUSMA

Canada’s political and media spheres seem to have developed an unhealthy obsession with the CUSMA. Will it survive the whims and shifting moods of the US president? Will we ever regain the level of access to the American market that we took for granted just a few years ago? What price will we have to pay to preserve what remains...

Podcasts

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Canada can build transportation gooder (and sometimes, we did build good)

Canada can build transportation gooder (and sometimes, we did build good)

Reece Martin joins Matt Gurney for a talk about success in the new media, how and why Canada gets infrastructure right and wrong, and mistakes we need to start avoiding.

What Canada gave up to (hopefully) open the Gordie Howe bridge

What Canada gave up to (hopefully) open the Gordie Howe bridge

A new deal between Canada and the U.S. resolves issues around the Gordie Howe International Bridge, which is now set to open on July 27. The bridge – which will become the second bridge connecting Windsor, Ont., and Detroit, Mich., – nearly opened last month, but the ribbon-cutting ceremony was quickly called off after U.S. President Donald Trump refused to...

Can Hamas’ handover restart Gaza’s peace plan?

Can Hamas’ handover restart Gaza’s peace plan?

The Gaza peace plan and ceasefire, announced last October, is in limbo. Israeli forces have continued their strikes and expanded control of the strip beyond the lines originally agreed upon in the plan. Humanitarian aid is trickling in but there are still concerns about how it’s being distributed. The U.S.-led Board of Peace, created to handle the resolution of violence...

Has Trump launched a forever war?

Has Trump launched a forever war?

It's yet another campaign promise US President Trump has seemed to loosen his commitment towards: not starting forever wars. A mission he projected to last only a few weeks has dragged into its fifth month, with a collapsed ceasefire, renewed rounds of attacks, an ambiguous Strait of Hormuz, and thousands of lives lost.